- Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136
- Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136
- Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136
- Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136
- Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136
- Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136
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NEW - Hand-crafted 'Spanish' Style Leather Bottle with Shoulder Straps - (45-8136)
- Leather Bottle
- £135.00

We could have easily made our Leather Bottles so that they all looked and felt exactly the same, by simply moulding them around a standard bottle shaped Wooden Block Former before assembly. However, that manufacturing technique would have created a style of bottle that would have lacked the individual character and originality that we were looking for – perhaps this will be a future project, if demand for this item requires it! Certainly wet moulding leather around a wooden former, before assembly, requires a lot less effort than wet moulding them after assembly as in the method that we employed.
Since we decided to approach the production of them from a more organic direction, creating them as individual and uniquely shaped items, it required that we mould them with dry sand. Sand moulding the bottles allows us to listen and feel the leather during the stretching process and thus do what the leather requires rather than forcing a required shape upon it. Because leather is an organic natural material it has its own distinct character, the shape it takes on is, you might say, built into the qualities of the leather and are teased into existence by us. During the waxing process the leather’s unique qualities, imperfections and markings, allow it to take on its own extraordinary colours, incorporating subtle shades and hews that define the qualities of the finished product making it quite unique.
Or you can melt Beeswax in a suitable container over a Bain Marie (water bath) – never heat beeswax over a naked flame as this can overheat the wax which can then spontaneously combust - and apply the melted beeswax to the damaged area. If the bottle’s shape has been compromised by crushing it can usually be blown back into shape before the beeswax is applied. Heating the bottle in an oven set to about 70 degrees Centigrade (158 degrees Fahrenheit) will allow the beeswax to melt and become hot enough to re-level within the fibres of the leathers, but will not be too hot to cook the leather and damage its structure. Allow the bottle to cool before handling it. Remove any excess bees’ wax that was not absorbed into the leather by gently scraping it off with a spoon. The surface can be further refined by applying pure Gum Turpentine to a cloth and rubbing off the wax, when dry, polish the surface with a dry cloth.